LAL
Illuminator
- Joined
- May 19, 2005
- Messages
- 3,255
Thus far, nothing.
You've spoken to him recently then?
Thus far, nothing.
It's illegal to remove, own, or ship more than a spoonful of Mt. St. Helens volcanic ash from the GP.
I have about five tons of ash from Mt. St. Helens 1980 eruption.
While I've never been to Alaska, I've gotten pretty close, spending five years on the Queen Charlotte Islands* off the coast of mainland British Columbia. (the northeastern tip is about equal distance from both Alaska and BC)
I loved it there, the wife hated it. She, big city girl that she is, found it too isolated.
I'd go back in a heartbeat, she wouldn't be caught dead there. Funny how two people can have such opposing viewpoints of a place.
Have you ever been to the west coast of Vancouver Island?Originally Posted by Huntster
Have you tried the North Gulf Coast?
The beachcombing is utterly fantastic. The flotsom from the entire North Pacific visits. You never know what you might find................
The beaches of Ucleulet/Tofino are gorgeous. Long Beach is beautiful.
You may suggest, but I happen to like charchy's sense of humor. .....
Yeah, well I like eating rotten beans and fermented squid guts and I even like you so there's no accounting for taste, hey Hunt?I like his sense of humor as well as his outlook.
Hey, someone should call the FBI...
Yeah, well I like eating rotten beans and fermented squid guts and I even like you so there's no accounting for taste, hey Hunt?![]()
I know what you can do with them! I'm guessing you might not know how to prepare Japanese rice so try taking one of those packages (make sure to mix in the soy sauce and mustard that should come with it), beat a couple of eggs, toss in a little cream, a pinch of sugar, a couple drops of soy sauce, then add your stinky beans. Throw it in the pan a few seconds and have it with your bacon and maybe some toast. Yum!Fortunately I haven't had my fried fat and chicken embryos yet. I may mix in some of those rotten beans. I have two packages in my refrigerator I don't know what to do with.
Two late. I'm nuking it with southwestern Egg Starts. I'm international. And lazy.I know what you can do with them! I'm guessing you might not know how to prepare Japanese rice so try taking one of those packages (make sure to mix in the soy sauce and mustard that should come with it), beat a couple of eggs, toss in a little cream, a pinch of sugar, a couple drops of soy sauce, then add your stinky beans. Throw it in the pan a few seconds and have it with your bacon and maybe some toast. Yum!
If you say so...Don't I always?
Nope, mountain goats' habitat is much more restricted than bigfoot's alleged geographic span (assuming the critters are real and that sighting reports are reliable enough to probe their range). Despite this fact, there are remains of mountain goats. And no remains of bigfoot-like creatures in North America.They are creatures of open mountain ranges, one of the habitats that is definitely not Bigfoot.
Maybe because, as the paper says, they may have been introduced there in the 20's?There's an effort to remove them from the Olympics because they're eating rare plants, but this paper says it's unlikely their fossils will be found in the Olympics (for two reasons).
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0888-8892(199510)9:5<1324:OMGCC>2.0.CO;2-0&size=LARGE
A species living in such a wide area has lots of potential remains preservation sites. Bogs, as you know, are all but one.The Sasquatch sighting maps show a correlation with areas with over 20" annual rainfall. The areas they do seem to inhabit are simply not conducive to fossilization. Extensive bogs like those in Europe aren't found in this country. The closest to that are in upper Minnesota and Michigan.
Oh, a species that is claimed to live from east to west North America is a serious contender, ain't it?I can't think of a more widespread species than the Red Panda, from Washington and Tennessee 3-4 mya to the Himalayas today, but all that's been found in this country, so far, are a few teeth and a jawbone?
And it's been pointed out that you don't have to be looking for a given fossil to find it. Some important remains were found by people who were not actually looking for fossils...That's been pointed out before, but look just at the hominid fossil record. Just how complete is that? It took the Leakeys 30 years to uncover one and they were looking.
That would have an easier time to eat the tiny bones of red pandas...They'd still get eaten by mice and bacteria.
A bipedal species could have evolved from Gigantopithecus... But its just speculation, and speculation with nothing to back it.I didn't make that claim in the first place. I think Gigantopithecus is a good candidate for an ancestor. Even if it wasn't a biped, over 300,000 years a bipedal descendant could well have evolved. Oreopithecus evolved bipedalism independently; why not an Orangutan relative?
Speculation with very little if any backing.BTW, I was being sarcastic about Homo erectus folklore. We don't know that Giganto becam extinct 300,000 years ago. They may have overlapped with modern humans. Their descendants may be living today in Asia and NA.
And that's all we know and all we have to work.What we do know is there was once a giant ape, with reduced canines, living in China.
Don't worry. They would for surely find some lame "explanation". Satan tricking humanity, God's first "projects" that never reached the prodution line, etc.If the record were complete, they wouldn't have a leg to stand on, would they? The irony has struck me too. I'm an atheist.
In some cases, lack of evidence actually is evidence of a lack... In bigfoot's case, the absence of reliable evidence backing its reality is quite compelling evidence of its inexistence, IMHO.And I think that's a non sequitur. Lack of evidence is not evidence of a lack, eh?
Misidentifications? Maybe. But again, this is just speculation. And please note collections from museum and universities are constantly "dug" for this type of thing.I don't know that there's anything to be found, but if there is, it may not have been found yet, or, perhaps, something has. Remains, if found, may have been misidentified (as extinct peccary teeth perhaps). There's a report of a primate, non-human skull being sent to sent for analysis and disappearing at USC. If true, that would point up the hazzards of finding something.
Any sasquatches in there? Anybody wanna bug the rangers and ask?
Wha? Not a fan of miso shiru? It's made with the same thing as your breakfast. Yum.I was in Japan briefly. One thing I learned was the clear soups are okay, but beware of the ones you can't see through.
Ape Cave? JK, but we can't link that without the mandatory scary legend, can we?Just where would one start looking for prints, bones (or even fossils) in this stuff?
Was the rain a factor?
If the wife hates the place, you'll never see it again, regardless how you might love it.
If you say so...
Nope, mountain goats' habitat is much more restricted than bigfoot's alleged geographic span (assuming the critters are real and that sighting reports are reliable enough to probe their range). Despite this fact, there are remains of mountain goats. And no remains of bigfoot-like creatures in North America.
Maybe because, as the paper says, they may have been introduced there in the 20's?
Even if they were there before, are the conditions everywhere at "bigfoot country" identical to those at the Olympic mountains? I don't think so.
A species living in such a wide area has lots of potential remains preservation sites. Bogs, as you know, are all but one.
Oh, a species that is claimed to live from east to west North America is a serious contender, ain't it?
And it's been pointed out that you don't have to be looking for a given fossil to find it. Some important remains were found by people who were not actually looking for fossils...
Evidently they did.That would have an easier time to eat the tiny bones of red pandas...
A bipedal species could have evolved from Gigantopithecus... But its just speculation, and speculation with nothing to back it.
Speculation with very little if any backing.
Gigantopithecus may have overlapped with modern humans... Is there some reliable backing for this speculation? Not that I'm aware of. What we actually know is that the reliable avaliable data indicates they were gone before the arrival of modern humans in Asia.
Gigantopithecus or their descendents may be living today in Asia and North America... Do we have any reliable evidence of this? Not that I'm aware of.
And that's all we know and all we have to work.
Everything else is only a supposition.
Conditions for a bigfoot/sasquatch candidate:
-bipedal
-2 to 3 m high
-look like the most common bigfoot renderings or Patty
-coehxisted in North America with the antecessors of the current Native American populations
One could even use less tighter specs, and admit a non-bipedal and/or not-so-big ape as the sasquatch myth's template. But still, it must be from North America and coehxisted for some time with the antecessors of the current Native American populations.
The undeniable fact, the reality, is that the fossil record provide no backing to the existence of such creature. One migth speculate on why not, but the fact itself will not change unless the remains of a bigfoot-like animal with the right age are found in North America.
Don't worry. They would for surely find some lame "explanation". Satan tricking humanity, God's first "projects" that never reached the prodution line, etc.
Just check how YEC defenders deal with geochronological data.
They have no leg to stand on, but they just don't realize this.
Not unlike some of the reasonings presented by some people who defend the claim bigfeet are real. Ironic, indeed.
In some cases, lack of evidence actually is evidence of a lack... In bigfoot's case, the absence of reliable evidence backing its reality is quite compelling evidence of its inexistence, IMHO.
Misidentifications? Maybe. But again, this is just speculation. And please note collections from museum and universities are constantly "dug" for this type of thing.
Now, as you said, the loss of a primate skull is just a report (got a link for it, so perhaps further checking can be made?), and we already know how reliable such information are.
But when it comes to the "hazzards of finding something"...
I have no idea of what you are talking about... Maybe I actually have, but I hope its not what I'm thinking...